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Title: The cytosolic pathway of L-malic acid synthesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: the role of fumarase. Author: Pines O, Even-Ram S, Elnathan N, Battat E, Aharonov O, Gibson D, Goldberg I. Journal: Appl Microbiol Biotechnol; 1996 Nov; 46(4):393-9. PubMed ID: 8987728. Abstract: Saccharomyces cerevisiae accumulates L-malic acid but not only minute amounts of fumaric acid. A 13C-nuclear magnetic resonance study following the label from glucose to L-malic acid indicates that the L-malic acid is synthesized from pyruvic acid via oxaloacetic acid. From this, and from previously published studies, we conclude that a cytosolic reductive pathway leading from pyruvic acid via oxaloacetic acid to L-malic acid is responsible for the L-malic acid production in yeast. The non-production of fumaric acid can be explained by the conclusion that, in the cell, cytosolic fumarase catalyzes the conversion of fumaric acid to L-malic but not the reverse. This conclusion is based on the following findings. (a) The cytosolic enzyme exhibits a 17-fold higher affinity towards fumaric acid than towards L-malic acid; the Km for L-malic acid is very high indicating that L-malic acid is not an in vivo substrate of the enzyme. (b) Overexpression of cytosolic fumarase does not cause accumulation of fumaric acid (but rather more L-malic acid). (c) According to 13C NMR studies there is no interconversion of cytosolic L-malic and fumaric acids.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]